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The European consortium OPERAS launches a survey on the uses of Open Access data

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The European consortium OPERAS launches a survey on the uses of Open Access data
BY THE CLEO TEAM · PUBLISHED 05/09/2017
Openedition and its European partners have formed a consortium to develop a European infrastructure for open scholarly communication: OPERAS. The objective is to offer a set of services to improve the dissemination and referencing of scientific content in Open Access. The new services will benefit the research community, as well as those interested in accessing recent scientific resources, validated by the scientific community.

The OPERAS consortium is launching today a survey on the usage of Open Access, in particular in the field of humanities and social sciences. The purpose  is to identify current practices and services that should be developed or invented. It will serve as a basis for defining the future infrastructure.

The survey addresses five different audiences, all actors, in various capacities, of Open Access: publishers, researchers, librarians, funders and the general public. It will collect information and suggestions mainly about common standards, good practices, new features and new integrated services.

The survey will end on 31st May 2017. Since all the OPERAS European partners are involved in the dissemination, the survey is entirely written in English in order to facilitate the processing of the answers.

The link for the general public’s survey is: https://survey.openedition.org/index.php/214336

It will take you 10 to 15 minutes to complete the survey.

Please find below the links to all the other surveys:

publishers: https://survey.openedition.org/index.php/468227
libraries: https://survey.openedition.org/index.php/212534
researchers: https://survey.openedition.org/index.php/831687
funders: https://survey.openedition.org/index.php/578782 
Thank you in advance for your participation.

Hethitologie Portal Mainz Online

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[First posted in AWOL 28 July 2011, updates 9 May 2017]

Hethitologie Portal Mainz
http://www.hethport.uni-wuerzburg.de/HPM/pics/schrift-logo-weiss6symb720trapa.png






ist eine von der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft annerkannte Forschungsinfrastruktur (http://risources.dfg.de/detail/RI_00500_de.html)
  • Ziele:
    1. Quellen und Dokumente online zur Verfügung zu stellen,
    2. Datensammlungen für die Weiterverwendung aufzubereiten und vor dem Verfall zu bewahren,
    3. Quellen und Datensammlungen in produktiver Weise miteinander zu verknüpfen,
    4. dadurch die Kooperation zu fördern,
    5. neue Arbeitsweisen und -möglichkeiten zu entwickeln
    6. und damit den Erkenntnisfortschritt zu fördern
    7. sowie die Arbeit durch Entlastung von traditionellen Routinearbeiten zu erleichtern.
The objectives of HPM are:
  • to provide online access to sources and documents,
  • to prepare databanks for further use and guarantee their preservation,
  • to link sources and databanks productively with one another,
  • in order to foster cooperation,
  • develop new methods and possibilities of research,
  • promote the progress of knowledge
  • as well as facilitate research by means of diminishing traditional routine procedures.

The Bridges Collection of Cypriot Antiquities

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The Bridges Collection 
Open Virtual Worlds
The Bridges Collection was donated to the University of St Andrews by Mrs M Bridges of St Andrews. Several cultural periods of Cyprus are represented by the artefacts of the collection. The Bronze and Iron Ages are very well represented with a variety of terracotta polished ware bowls, jugs, and figurines. The Byzantine period is also represented through a good selection of Sgraffiato ware dishes.
This exhibit will first introduce you to the idea behind the Virtual Museum project. Then each page will navagate the view throughout the Bridges Collection as a whole, introducing several of the artefacts in the collection through the multiple phases which it represents. Spanning an impressive vareity of time periods, it begins with Early and Middle Bronze Age Cyprus, passing through the Iron Age, Roman, and finally including the Byzantine period.
More than this, however, this site will attempt to further explore several themes within the collection itself, including aspects such as burial practices and trade and manufacture in Cyprus, drawing on outside collections and sources to complete the story. 

Cuneiform Commentaries Project

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[First posted in AWOL 12 March 2015, updated 10 May 2017]

Cuneiform Commentaries Project
http://ccp.yale.edu/sites/default/files/images/K%202092.jpg
Mesopotamian commentaries represent the world’s oldest cohesive group of hermeneutic texts. Numbering nearly 900, the earliest date to the eighth century and the latest to ca. 100 BCE. The purpose of this website is to make the corpus available both to the scholarly community and a more general audience by providing background information on the genre, a searchable catalog, as well as photos, drawings, annotated editions, and translations of individual commentary tablets. For the first time the cuneiform commentaries, currently scattered over 21 museums around the globe, will be accessible on one platform.

The Cuneiform Commentaries Project is funded by Yale University (2013-2016) and the National Endowment for the Humanities (Division of Research Programs “Scholarly Editions and Translations,” 2015-2018).

Open Access Journal: Siedlungsforschung. Archäologie – Geschichte – Geographie

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 [First posted in AWOL 2 August 2010. Updated 11 May 2017]

Siedlungsforschung. Archäologie – Geschichte – Geographie
ISSN: 0175–0046
http://www.kulturlandschaft.org/publikationen/siedlungsforschung/siedlungsforschung-30.jpg
Die Zeitschrift "Siedlungsforschung: Archäologie - Geschichte - Geographie" enthält Aufsätze, Miszellen, Rezensionsartikel, Berichte und Bibliographien. Die Zeitschrift erscheint in einem Band von ca. 300 Seiten im Verlag "Siedlungsforschung" in Bonn. Bei den persönlichen Mitgliedern des "Arbeitskreises für historische Kulturlandschaftsforschung in Mitteleuropa e.V." ist der Bezugspreis im Jahresbeitrag enthalten.
The following volumes are available online:
Mit Beiträgen von V. Denzer, A. Dietrich, M. Hardt & H. T. Porada, A. Simms, O. Heinrich-Tamáska, M. Hardt, M. Wołoszyn, Ch. Schneider, Ch. Zschieschang, Ch. Herrmann, W. Carls, V. Denzer, A. Dietrich & H. T. Porada, A. Schindling, J. Meier, J. Lafrenz, A. Dix, G. Gabel, J.-E. Steinkrüger, R. P. Tanner, W. Schenk, R. Luick, V. Gawel, Ch. Maulshagen
Mit Beiträgen von T.Gunzelmann, A. Dix, T. Eißing, P. Rückert, H. Becker & H. Hildebrandt, V. Eidloth, M. Schramm, K. Fehn, H. Losert & L. Werther, L. Werther, J. Hofmann, J.-E. Steinkrüger, J. Haffke
Mit Beiträgen von: M. Hardt, H.-R. Egli, A. Hafner & Ch. Harb, O. Tamáska & S. Hipp, H. Hüster Plogmann, T. Meier, H.-U. Schiedt, A. Baeriswyl, R. Tanner, R. Flückiger-Seiler, T. Yoshida & M. Kubota, Ch. Schuppert, F. Möller
Mit Beiträgen von:S. Sievers, D. Wehner, P. Kooij, T. Küntzel, R. Berge, R. E. de Bruin, P. Burggraaff & K.-D. Kleefeld, R. P. Tanner, P. Rückert, A. Björklund, K. Fehn, R. Verbruggen, M. Kriest, O. Heinrich-Tamaska, R. Schreg, A. Nováček & A. Kruse
Mit Beiträgen von: F. Irsigler, S. Freund, E. Gringmuth-Dallmer, V. Salač, T. Fischer, M. Hardt, P. Ettel, C. Zschieschang, H.-F. Kniehase, H.-G. Wagner, V. Kaminske, K.-D. Kleefeld
Mit Beiträgen von Winfried Schenk, Klaus Fehn, Ute Wardenga, Sebastian Brather, Eike Gringmuth-Dallmar, Fred Ruchhöft, Rainer Schreg, Udo Recker, Rudolf Bergmann, Theo Spek, Johannes Renes und Johannes C.A. Kolen, Peter Rückert, Axel Posluschny
Mit Beiträgen von Th. Glade, K.-E. Behre, G. J. Borger, E. Freifrau von Boeselager, M. Jakubowski-Tiessen, E. Gringmuth-Dallmer, P. Rückert, B. Heuser-Hildebrandt, M. Gudd, Ch. Röhr, L. Clemens, M. Deutsch & K. T. Rost, Ch. Stolz, Th. Meier, K. Fehn
Mit Beiträgen von: Dietrich Denecke, Franz Irsigler, Günter Mangelsdorf, Heiko Steuer, Christian Lübke, Hans-Rudolf Egli, Klaus Fehn, Reinhard Zölitz-Möller, Helmut Klüter, Reinhold E. Lob
Mit Beiträgen von Klaus Fehn, Karl-Heinz Willroth, Hans-Wilhelm Heine, Hauke Jöns, Caspar Ehlers, Christoph Bartels, Monika Meyer-Künzel, Dieter Rödel, Klaus Fesche, Olaf Mussmann, Siegfried Zelnhefer, Axel Priebs
Mit Beiträgen von Winfried Schenk, Leszek Pavel Slupecki, Jerzy Strelczyk, Izabella Skierska, Ralf Gebuhr, Winfried Schich, Rudolf Bergmann, Jerzy Piekalski, Krzysztof R. Mazurski, Peter Cede, Oliver Karnau, Zoltán Ilyés, Klaus Fehn, Dietrich Denecke
Mit Beiträgen von Winfried Schenk, Günter Moosbauer, Chrystina Häuber, Hansjörg Küster, Christoph Morissey, Peter Rückert, Bernd-Stefan Grewe, Aline Kottmann und Reinhold Schaal, Bernward Selter, Anton Schuler, Richard Pott und Holger Freund, Franz Schmithüsen, Per Grau Moler, Dietrich Denecke, Rudolf Bergmann
Mit Beiträgen von Klaus Fehn, Winfried Schenk, Peter Rückert, Klaus-Dieter Kleefeld, Hermann Parzinger, Perdita Pohle, Dirk Meier, Karl Martin Born, Mathias Koch, Günther Moosbauer, Hansjörg Küster, Renate Gerlach, Bernward Selter, Gabriele Recker, Ulrich Stanjek, Oliver Karnau, Josef Mangold, Franz Maier, Helmut Flachenecker, Jürgen Vollbrecht und Heinrich Otten
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Mit Beiträgen von Werner Rösener, Johann-Bernhard Haversath, Mathias Austermann, Norbert Gebauer, Udo Recker, Brigitta Vits, Ulrich Reuling, Reinhard Bauer, Jürg Tauber, Friedrich Eigler, Hans Krawarik, Armin Ratusny Eike Gringmuth-Dallmer, Mathias Hardt, Hans-Jürgen Nitz
Mit Beiträgen von Klaus Fehn, Wolfgang Wegener, Hans-Werner Wehling, Rolf Plöger, Johannes Biecker, Michael Hartenstein, Horst Kranz, Jörg Wiesemann, Johannes Renes, Georg Römhild, Günther Hein und Christoph Willms
Mit Beiträgen von Michael Müller-Wille, Christer Westerdahl, Winfried Schich, Andreas Dix, Achim Leube,
Axel Priebs, Rolf Plöger, Bruno Benthien, Susanne Schumacher-Gorni, Gerd Hoffmann, Walter Dörfler und Jörn Thiede

Mit Beiträgen von Eike Gringmuth-Dallmer, Günter Löffler, Harm Tjalling Waterbolk, Theo Spek, Wim A. Ligtendag, Johannes A. Mol, Paul Noomen, Johannes Ey, Dirk Meier, Hans-Rudolf Egli und Carl-Hans Hauptmeyer
Mit Beiträgen von Hans-Jürgen Nitz, Georg Kossack, Walter Janssen, Karlheinz Blaschke, Felix Escher, Frank Hering, Dieter Scholz, Heinz Günter Steinberg, Thomas Wölker, Luise Grundmann, Heinz Schürmann, Horst Förster und Jörg Stadelbauer
Mit Beiträgen von Dietrich Denecke, Rudolf Bergmann, Manfred Balzer, Günter Mangelsdorf, VladimírNekuda, Rostislav Nekuda, Ervín Cerný, Alojz Habovštiak, Hans Krawarik, Peter Rückert, Peter Cede und Johannes Renes
Mit Beiträgen von Klaus Fehn, Hans Losert, Hans-Georg Stephan, Gabriele Isenberg, Miroslav Richter, Tomás Velimský, Lieselott Enders, Michel Pauly, Roland Flückiger-Seiler, Ernst Pleßl, Martina Stercken, Gerhard Henkel und Alois Mayr
Mit Beiträgen von Dietrich Denecke, Wolf-Dieter Sick, Uwe Kühl, Jörg Stadelbauer, Rainer Graafen, Heiko Steuer, Eike Gringmuth-Dallmer, Gerhard Billig, Volkmar Geupel, Wolfgang Schwabenicky und Rainer Aurig
Mit Beiträgen von Franz Irsigler, Hermann Parzinger, Helmut Bender, Vladimír Nekuda, Armin Ratusny, Hans-Jürgen Nitz, Winfried Schich, Ludwig Schober, Johann-Bernhard Haversath und Klaus Fehn
Mit Beiträgen von Klaus Aerni, Hans-Rudolf Egli, René Wyss, Paul Gleirscher, Jürgen Rageth, Werner Kreisel, Werner Meyer, Werner Bätzing, Susanne Pacher und Hans Becker
Mit Beiträgen von Jelier A.J. Vervloet, Guus J. Borger, J.H.F. Bloemers, W.J.H. Willems, H.A. Heidinga, Peter Henderikx, Herbert Sarfatij, Adriaan Verhulst, Jan Bieleman, J.D.H. Harten, Johannes Renes und Gerard P. van der Ven
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Mit Beiträgen von Helmut Jäger, Walter Janssen, Jens Lüning, Arie J. Kalis, Karl-Ernst Behre, Helmut Bender, Ulf Dirlmeier, Christian Pfister, Jürgen Hagel, Engelbert Schramm, Achim Rost, Reinhard Mook, Helge Salvesen, Günter Bayerl und Hubert Mücke
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Mit Beiträgen von Wilfried Krings, Günter P. Fehring, Miroslav Richter, Zdenek Smetánka, Pavel J. Michna, Vladimír Nekuda, Herbert Knittler, Jürgen Ellermeyer und Renate Banik-Schweitzer
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Mit Beiträgen von Karlheinz Willroth, Brigitta Hårdh, Svend Gissel, Franz Irsigler, Karel A.H.W. Leenders, Ulrich Troitzsch, Frank Norbert Nagel und Gerhard Oberbeck
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Mit Beiträgen von Klaus Fehn, Dietrich Denecke, Helmut Hildebrandt, Neek Maqsud und Hans-Jürgen Nitz
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Mit Beiträgen von Michael Müller-Wille, Hans-Jürgen Nitz, Hendrik van der Linden, Guus J. Borger, Ekkehard Wassermann, Klaus Brandt, Rosemarie Krämer, Dietrich Hoffmann, Hans Joachim Kühn und Bodo Higelke
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Mit Beiträgen von Busso von der Dollen, Burkhard Hofmeister, Winfried Schich, Felix Escher, Wolfgang Hofmann, Eberhard Bohm, Franz Irsigler und Henriette Meynen

Institute for the Study of the Ancient World Video Lecture Archive

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Institute for the Study of the Ancient World Video Lecture Archive
Videos of past events at ISAW are now available in the Video Archive found on our Events page. We will continue to add more recordings as they become available.
The following public lectures are available to watch online:
A Paradise in the Caucasus: An Achaemenid Residence in Azerbaijan
Guest Lecture
Florian Knauss, Director of Staatliche Antikensammlungen und Glyptothek, München
May 2, 2017 
New Term Excavations at Kültepe: The First International Trade Center in Anatolia
Guest Lecture
Fikri Kulakoglu, Ankara University
March 28, 2017 
Globalising the Mediterranean's Iron Age
Guest Lecture
Tamar Hodos, University of Bristol
March 20, 2017
Medicine and the Humanities from Ancient to ModernFaculty Lecture
Claire Bubb, ISAW
March 9, 2017
Time and Cosmos in Greco-Roman AstrologyExhibition Lecture
Stephan Heilen, University of Osnabrück
February 27, 2017
Fantastical Space and Heroic Journeys in Mesopotamian LiteratureFaculty Lecture
Gina Konstantopoulos, ISAW Visiting Assistant Professor
February 21, 2017 
Enigmatic Sites and Headless Nubians: Exploring the Eastern Desert of Late Roman EgyptARCE Lecture
Colleen M. Darnell, University of Hartford
February 2, 2017 
Geographical Portable Sundials: Reliable Instruments or Roman Fashion Statements?Exhibition LectureRichard Talbert, University of North CarolinaJanuary 26, 2017
Weeks, Months, and Years in Greek and Roman CalendarsExhibition LectureDaryn Lehoux, Queen's UniversityDecember 1, 2016
Imhotep Comes Forth by Day
ARCE Lecture
Janice Kamrin, Metropolitan Museum of Art
November 17, 2016
Fruits of the Silk Road
VRS Lecture
Robert Spengler, Visiting Research Scholar, ISAW
November 15, 2016
Ancient Sundials: Art, Technology, and Culture
Exhibition Lecture
James Evans, University of Puget Sound
November 10, 2016
A People Without a Name or, Who Were the Hittites?
Tenth Annual Leon Levy Lecture
Theo van den Hout, Arthur and Joann Rasmussen Professor of Western Civilization and of Hittite and Anatolian Languages, Oriental Institute of the University of ChicagoNovember 3, 2016
Decrepit Rome, your morals disintegrate, your walls collapse!Critique of Rome in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages
VRS Lecture
Maya Maskarinec, Visiting Research Scholar, ISAW
October 25, 2016
Death and Taxes?
Economy, Society and the Imperial State in Babylonia in the Sixth Century BCE
Michael Jursa, Professor of Assyriology at the University of Vienna, Corresponding Fellow of the Austrian Academy of Sciences
September 29, 2016
Herodes Atticus and the Greco-Roman World: Imperial Cosmos, Cosmic Allusions, Art and Culture in his Estate in Southern PeloponneseExhibition Lecture
Georgios Spyropoulos, Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Sport, Directorate General of Antiquities and Cultural Heritage, Athens
September 13, 2016
Silk Roads and Steppe Roads of Medieval China: History Unearthed from Tombs, IV
A Tang Dynasty Ally in War and Ritual: The Tomb of Pugu Yitu (635-678) in Mongolia
Rostovtzeff Lecture Series
Jonathan K. Skaff, Visiting Research Scholar, ISAW
April 19, 2016
Silk Roads and Steppe Roads of Medieval China: History Unearthed from Tombs, III
Sogdians or Borderlanders?, Part II: Death Rituals Revealed in Tombs
Rostovtzeff Lecture Series
Jonathan K. Skaff, Visiting Research Scholar, ISAWApril 12, 2016
Silk Roads and Steppe Roads of Medieval China: History Unearthed from Tombs, II
Sogdians or Borderlanders?, Part I: Lives Revealed in Epitaphs
Rostovtzeff Lecture Series
Jonathan K. Skaff, Visiting Research Scholar, ISAWApril 5, 2016
Silk Roads and Steppe Roads of Medieval China: History Unearthed from Tombs, I
A Slave Road? Sogdian Merchants and Foreign Slaves at Turfan
Rostovtzeff Lecture Series
Jonathan K. Skaff, Visiting Research Scholar, ISAWMarch 29, 2016
Memory, Tradition, and Image Production in Ancient Mesopotamia
Faculty Lecture
Beate Pongratz-Leisten, Professor of Ancient Near Eastern Studies, ISAW
March 24, 2016

Open Access Monograph Series: American Studies in Papyrology

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[First posted in AWOL 25 Dectember 2015, updated 11 May 2017 (the addition of 13 volumes. 29 volumes of the series have now been digitized)]

American Studies in Papyrology
http://papyrology.org/templates/papyrology/images/front.jpg
The ASP publishes The Bulletin of the American Society of Papyrologists (BASP), the only North American journal in the field of papyrology. The Society maintains an extensive back list for BASP. The University of Michigan Library now maintains an electronic archive of BASP from Vol. 1 (1963/4).

The Society also publishes a monograph series, American Studies in Papyrology, a new series of reprinted "Classics" in papyrology and occasional Supplements to BASP.
American Society of Papyrologists monographs and supplements are distributed by Oxbow/Casemate Academic. Outside of North America, contact Oxbow Books, 10 Hythe Bridge Street, Oxford, OX1 2EW, United Kingdom, Tel: +44 1865 241249, Fax: +44 1865 794449, Email: oxbow@oxbowbooks.com. In North America, contact Casemate Academic, PO Box 511 (20 Main St.), Oakville, CT 06779, Tel. 860/945-9329, Fax: 860/945-9468.   [See here]

Yale papyri in the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library v.1

Author:Oates, John F.Samuel, Alan Edouard.Welles, C. Bradford (Charles Bradford), 1901-
Publisher:American Society of Papyrologists
Place of Publication: New Haven
Date of Publication: 1967-



Open Access Monograph Series: Babylonische Archive

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Open Access Monograph Series: Collection de la Maison de l'Orient, Série archéologique

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[First posted in AWOL 4 June 2014, updated 11 May, 2017]

Collection de la Maison de l'Orient, Série archéologique
And see all of the

Open Access Monograph Series: Travaux de la Maison de l'Orient

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[First posted in AWOL 1 June 2014, updated 11 May, 2017]

Travaux de la Maison de l'Orient
ISSN: 0766-0510
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La collection des Travaux de la Maison de l’Orient (TMO) publie les résultats des travaux réalisés dans le cadre des thèmes de la Fédération de Recherche. Mais elle accueille également d’autres ouvrages individuels ou collectifs en rapport avec les programmes de recherche développés au sein de la Maison de l’Orient et de la Méditerranée, en particulier les études archéologiques et géographiques dont l’illustration nécessairement abondante trouve sa place dans ce grand format (21 x 29,7).
    And see all of the

    See AWOL's Alphabetical List of Open Access Monograph Series in Ancient Studies

    Collection de l'Institut des Sciences et Techniques de l'Antiquité

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    [First posted in AWOL 23 March 2016, updated 12 May 2017]

    Collection de l'Institut des Sciences et Techniques de l'Antiquité
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    L’Institut des Sciences et Techniques de l’Antiquité est une équipe de recherche fondée en 1967 et basée à l’université de Franche-Comté. Dès son origine, sous le nom de Centre d’Histoire Ancienne (CHA), cette équipe s’est appliquée à diffuser les productions scientifiques dans le domaine de l’Antiquité, tout d’abord à travers la publication d’une collection, puis à l’aide d’une revue, les Dialogues d’Histoire ancienne, fondée en 1974.
    Les premiers ouvrages sont parus à partir de 1959, aux Annales Littéraires de l’Université de Besançon. Cette série s’est ensuite enrichie par les travaux sur l’esclavage et l’affranchissement qui donnèrent naissance au GIREA (Groupe International de Recherche sur l’Esclavage dans l’Antiquité). Enfin, la « collection ISTA » dans sa forme actuelle est née de la fusion des séries du Centre d’histoire ancienne de Besançon et de l’Institut Félix Gafiot.

    Aujourd’hui, la collection ISTA publie les travaux pluridisciplinaires de chercheurs français et internationaux sous la forme de monographies, d’ouvrages collectifs ou d’édition de sources, ainsi que sa revue et ses suppléments DHA.

    Monographies

    Anthology

    Conference proceedings


    Open Access Journal: Actes du Groupe de Recherches sur l’Esclavage depuis l’Antiquité

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    Actes du Groupe de Recherches sur l’Esclavage depuis l’Antiquité
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    Le Groupe International de Recherches sur l’Esclavage depuis l’Antiquité (GIREA) puise ses origines dans les premiers colloques d’histoire sociale tenus à Besançon de 1970 à 1974. Le GIREA créé, à l’initiative, entre autres membres fondateurs, de Pierre Lévêque (Besançon), et de Mario Attilio Levi (Milan) a toujours eu pour principe d’être un réseau de recherche fédérant les chercheurs qui souhaitent travailler sur l’esclavage avec une perspective d’abord sociale, économique et politique puis en s’ouvrant à l’ensemble du spectre des thématiques qui renouvellent la recherche historique, lexicographique, sociologique, économique, culturelle et religieuse. Sans prétendre à la totalité, le GIREA a toujours ouvert aux chercheurs les plus divers, venus d’Europe et de tous les continents, ses colloques plurilingues toujours publiés par les universités organisatrices qui se déroulent d’une université à une autre, d’un pays à un autre selon les candidatures et les propositions thématiques.

        Open Access Journal: Dialogues d'histoire ancienne

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        [First posted in AWOL 2 September 2009. Updated 12 May 2017]

        Dialogues d'histoire ancienne
        eISSN - 1955-270X
        http://www.cairn.info/vign_rev/DHA/DHA_HS05_L148.jpg
        En 1974, Pierre Lévêque crée la revue Dialogues d’Histoire Ancienne, conçue comme un espace de présentation et de discussion des études sur l’histoire des sociétés antiques, de leurs structures sociales, économiques, religieuses et culturelles.
        Revue d’histoire ancienne généraliste publiée par l’Institut des Sciences Techniques de l’Antiquité (ISTA) de l’Université de Franche-Comté, elle s’efforce également d’offrir des approches diverses, d’inventorier des domaines nouveaux, de s’intéresser à des espaces considérés trop longtemps comme périphériques.
        (1974 - 2016) 87 Issues, 2444 documents

        1974-1979

        • 1974
        • 1976
        • 1977
        • 1978
        • 1979

        1980-1989

        2010-...

        Dialogues d'histoire ancienne. Suppléments

        Recent volumes are online at Cairn by subscription/license.


        University of Utah - Marriott Library Arabic Papyrus, Parchment, and Paper

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         [First posted in AWOL 24 October 2012, Updated 12 May 2017]

        University of Utah - Marriott Library Arabic Papyrus, Parchment, and Paper
        Arabic Paper #0972
        Arabic Papyrus, Parchment & Paper Collection is the largest of its kind in the United States, containing 770 Arabic papyrus documents, 1300 Arabic paper documents, and several pieces on parchment. The collection was acquired by Prof. Aziz Suriyal Atiya, founder of the Middle East Center and the Middle East Library. A large number of pieces date to the period between 700 and 850 CE. The collection includes a significant number of documents from the pre-Ottoman period and thus offers unique source material on the political, economic, religious and intellectual life of Egypt during the first two centuries of Islamic rule and the period up to Ottoman domination.

        For more information about this collection please see the Arabic Papyrus and Paper Inventory
        Browse all records in Arabic Papyrus, Parchment, and Paper Collection 
         

        And see also Open Access Manuscripts Library - University of Utah


        APD - The Arabic Papyrology Database

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        [First posted in AWOL 29 March 2010. Updated 13 May 2017]

        APD - The Arabic Papyrology Database
        The Arabic Papyrology Database is a tool enabling you to access the editions of Arabic documents written on different material such as papyrus, parchment or paper. Those productive editions are an often unraised treasure for almost every aspect of Islamic history up to the 16th c. A.D. 

        The APD comprises a total of 11664 documents. For 3453 out of these, we give both the full text and the metadata, while for 8211, we give the metadata only. The tool 'Documents' allows to search for documents and read their text in different layers. The tool 'Text' accesses single words or combinations of words - perfect for investigating linguistic peculiarities. The tool 'Lexicon' gives you direct access to all of the lexicon, incl. Greek, Coptic, etc. words. Each document is also provided with its metadata, amongst others place and date of origin or its genre as for instance a contract of lease or a petition.

        The Arabic Papyrology Database is the first electronic compilation of Arabic papyri. It is a non-commercial project running under the patronage of the International Society for Arabic Papyrology (ISAP) and a partner of the Trismegistos metadata project of Greek, Demotic, Coptic, Arabic, etc. documents. Access is free via the Internet.




        University of Iowa: Classics Theses and Dissertations

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        University of Iowa: Classics Theses and Dissertations

        Theses/Dissertations from 2016

        Overholt, Michael S. (2016), The practice of ἄσκησις in Galen's Avoiding distress

        Theses/Dissertations from 2015

        Burns, Aaron (2015), Diatribe and Plutarch's practical ethics

        Theses/Dissertations from 2014

        Shreve-Price, Sharada Sue (2014), Complicated courtesans: Lucian's Dialogues of the courtesans

        Theses/Dissertations from 2013

        Langseth, Joshua Lee (2013), Knowing God: a study of the argument of Numenius of Apameia's On the good
        Samson, Lindsay Grant (2013), The philosophy of desire in Theocritus' Idylls

        Theses/Dissertations from 2012

        Preus, Christian Abraham (2012), The art of Aeschines: anti-rhetorical argumentation in the speeches of Aeschines

        Theses/Dissertations from 2010

        Thorne, Mark Allen (2010), Lucan's Cato, the defeat of victory, the triumph of memory

        Theses/Dissertations from 1936

        Jepsen, Laura (1936), Cupid

        New Open Access Journal: Heródoto - Revista do Grupo de Estudos e Pesquisas sobre a Antiguidade Clássica e suas Conexões Afro-asiáticas

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        Heródoto - Revista do Grupo de Estudos e Pesquisas sobre a Antiguidade Clássica e suas Conexões Afro-asiáticas
        Heródoto - ISSN Eletrônico - 2448-2609
        Heródoto – Revista do Grupo de Estudos e Pesquisas sobre a Antiguidade Clássica e suas Conexões Afro-asiáticas, originou-se do interesse de investigação de estudiosos do mundo clássico que o pensam a partir de suas conexões com os mundos africano e asiático conhecidos na Antiguidade. Desenvolveu-se em parceria com pesquisadores do mundo contemporâneo de História da África, da Arte Africana e da Ásia, que consideram o mundo antigo como presença posterior, determinada e reformulada pelas múltiplas visões de diferentes historicidades que lhe sucederam. Sabidamente, ao longo da história do pensamento ocidental, as conexões e integrações entre gregos e romanos e povos da África e da Ásia foram frequentemente negligenciadas como objeto de estudo. Ao voltar seus interesses para essas frentes, reconhecendo-lhes sua importância capital, a revista Heródoto parte da convicção de que as relações entre o mundo clássico e a afro-Ásia constituíram uma espécie de pano de fundo para a longa história Ocidental e Oriental. Com o intuito de contribuir com os trabalhos já realizados nesse campo, dois são os objetivos das pesquisas desenvolvidas pelo grupo:1) Evidenciar as influências mútuas e não hierarquizadas entre as culturas greco-romanas e afro-asiáticas - considerando, para além das relações de aceitação e dominação, instâncias como assimilação, ajustamento, conflito, negociação e resistência ante os contatos. 2) Apontar para as influências exercidas pelas teorias do eurocentrismo, do afrocentrismo e do asianismo na produção historiográfica acerca do mundo antigo.

        Vol 1, No 1 (2016)

        Dossiê:O MUNDO CLÁSSICO E SUAS CONEXÕES AFRO-ASIÁTICAS

        Table of Contents

        Complete Number

        Heródoto - V. 01, n. 01, março de 2016 (PDF do número completo)PDF (Português (Brasil))
         
        EXPEDIENTE/EXPEDIENTPDF (Português (Brasil))
         

        Editors Note

        EDITORIAL - Mundos conectados: África, Ásia e o Mediterrâneo greco-romanoPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Glaydson José da Silva, Gilberto da Silva Francisco 001-004
        EDITORS NOTE - Connected worlds, Africa, Asia and the Greco-Roman MediterraneanPDF
        Glaydson José da Silva, Gilberto da Silva Francisco 005-008

        Preface

        APRESENTAÇÃOPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Glaydson José da Silva 009-012
        PREFACEPDF
        Glaydson José da Silva 013-016

        Dossier

        CURADORES DO IMPÉRIO: PATRIMÔNIO COMO PILHAGEM COLONIALISTAPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Pedro Paulo Abreu Funari, Tamima Orra Mourad 019-036
        STEWARDS OF EMPIRE: HERITAGE AS COLONIALIST BOOTYPDF
        Pedro Paulo Abreu Funari, Tamima Orra Mourad 037-054
        A RESTAURAÇÃO DO ODEION DE PÉRICLES EM ATENAS NO SÉCULO I A.C.: NOVOS E ANTIGOS PERSASPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Fabio Augusto Morales 055-072
        THE RESTORATION OF PERIKLES’ ODEION AT ATHENS IN THE FIRST CENTURY BC: NEW AND ANCIENT BARBARIANSPDF
        Fabio Augusto Morales 073-090
        DESCOBRINDO O EGITO ANTIGO NA MODERNIDADE: A CONTRIBUIÇÃO DO ANTIQUARISTA GIOVANNI BELZONI (1816-1819)PDF (Português (Brasil))
        Natascha de Andrade Eggers 091-112
        DISCOVERING ANCIENT EGYPT IN MODERNITY: THE CONTRIBUTION OF AN ANTIQUARIAN, GIOVANNI BELZONI (1816-1819)PDF
        Natascha de Andrade Eggers 113-132
        VALE 5 SICLOS DE PRATA: A ESCRAVIDÃO NOS ARQUIVOS PRIVADOS MESOPOTÂMICOSPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Katia Maria Paim Pozzer 133-148
        WORTH 5 SILVER SHEKELS: SLAVERY IN MESOPOTAMIAN'S PRIVATE ARCHIVESPDF
        Katia Maria Paim Pozzer 149-164
        O ESPÍRITO DO MEDO: ROMA E O ABSOLUTISMOPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Adilton Luís Martins 165-194
        THE SPIRIT OF FEAR: ROME AND ABSOLUTISMPDF
        Adilton Luís Martins 195-227

        Articles

        A HISTORIOGRAFIA CONSTRUCIONISTA DA ERÓTICA GREGAPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Daniel Barbo 231-264
        THE CONSTRUCTIONIST HISTORIOGRAPHY OF GREEK EROTICSPDF
        Daniel Barbo 265-299
        OVÍDIO E O IDEAL DE PUELLA DOCTA NA ELEGIA ERÓTICA ROMANAPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Renata Cerqueira Barbosa 300-321
        OVID AND THE IDEAL OF DOCTA PUELLA IN THE ROMAN EROTIC ELEGYPDF
        Renata Cerqueira Barbosa 322-343
        ARISTOCRACIA E PARTICIPAÇÃO POPULAR NA POLÍTICA ROMANA REPUBLICANAPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Jonathan Cruz Moreira 342-363
        ARISTOCRACY AND POPULAR ENGAGEMENT IN REPUBLICAN ROMAN POLITICSPDF
        Jonathan Cruz Moreira 364-383
        ANTIGUIDADE TARDIA: IMAGEM E DOCUMENTOPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Claudio Umpierre Carlan 384-399
        LATE ANTIQUITY: IMAGE AND DOCUMENTPDF
        Cláudio Umpierre Carlan 400-415

        Translations

        OS ROMANOS NA ÁFRICA OU A ÁFRICA ROMANIZADA? ARQUEOLOGIA, COLONIZAÇÃO E NACIONALISMO NA ÁFRICA DO NORTEPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Claude Lepelley 418-437
        A ÁFRICA NO CAPÍTULO XXXV DO ÉDITO DO MÁXIMO DE DIOCLECIANOPDF (Português (Brasil))
        Pascal Arnaud 438-457
        O EGITO E OS DESERTOS CIRCUNVIZINHOS À LUZ DE NOVAS DESCOBERTAS (IV-III MILÊNIOS A.C.)PDF (Português (Brasil))
        Juan Carlos Moreno García 458-477

        Reviews

        FEITOSA, LOURDES CONDE. The Archeology of Gender, Love and Sexuality in Pompeii. Oxford: Archeopress, 2013. 63P.PDF (Português (Brasil))
        André Pereira da Rocha 480-483
        FEITOSA, LOURDES CONDE. The Archeology of Gender, Love and Sexuality in Pompeii. Oxford: Archeopress, 2013. 63P.PDF
        André Pereira da Rocha 484-486
        CAMPOS, CARLOS EDUARDO DA COSTA & CANDIDO, MARIA REGINA (ORGS). Caesar Augustus: entre Práticas e Representações. Vitória/Rio de Janeiro: Departamento de Línguas & UERJ – NEA, 2014, 375P.PDF (Português (Brasil))
        Gregory Gallo 487-492
        CAMPOS, CARLOS EDUARDO DA COSTA & CANDIDO, MARIA REGINA (ORGS). Caesar Augustus: entre Práticas e Representações. Vitória/Rio de Janeiro: Departamento de Línguas & UERJ – NEA, 2014, 375P.PDF
        Gregory Gallo 493-497
        OLIVEIRA, JÚLIO CÉSAR MAGALHÃES DE. Potestas Populi. Particiapation Populaire et Action Ccollective dans les Villes de L’afrique Romaine Tardive (VERS 300-430 APR. J.-C.), TURNHOUT, BREPOLS, 2012, p.375PDF (Português (Brasil))
        Fabiano Fernandes 499-502
        OLIVEIRA, JÚLIO CÉSAR MAGALHÃES DE. Potestas Populi. Particiapation Populaire et Action Ccollective dans les Villes de L’afrique Romaine Tardive (VERS 300-430 APR. J.-C.), TURNHOUT, BREPOLS, 2012, p.375PDF
        Fabiano Fernandes 503-506
        FREEMAN, PHILIP. Alexandre, O Grande. Tradução de Marília Chaves e Márcia Men. Barueri, Amarilys, 2014. 384p.PDF (Português (Brasil))
        Thiago do Amaral Biazotto 507-510
        FREEMAN, PHILIP. Alexandre, O Grande. Tradução de Marília Chaves e Márcia Men. Barueri, Amarilys, 2014. 384p.PDF
        Thiago do Amaral Biazotto 511-514
        GUARINELLO, NORBERTO LUIZ. História Antiga. São Paulo: Contexto, 2013. 174p.PDF (Português (Brasil))
        Rafael Augusto Nakayama Rufino 515-520
        GUGUARINELLO, NORBERTO LUIZ. História Antiga. São Paulo: Contexto, 2013. 174P.PDF
        Rafael Augusto Nakayama Rufino 521-525
         

        Digitized Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (CIL) at Arachne

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         [First posted in AWOL 30 January 2012.  Most recently updated 15 May 2017]

        Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (CIL)
        The Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (CIL) is a comprehensive collection of ancient Latin inscriptions from all corners of the Roman Empire. Public and personal inscriptions throw light on all aspects of Roman life and history. The Corpus continues to be updated with new editions and supplements by the Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften.
        This digitized version of the CIL will initially comprise of the more than 50 parts (of vols. I-XVI + auctaria and of v. I (edition altera)) published before 1940. Available funding covers the digitization of the volumes with an imperfect OCR searching capability. The goal is to eventually create a keyword searchable database to contain also future volumes of the CIL as they fall outside of copyright restrictions and to eventually do the same for the Inscriptiones Graecae.
        The printed version of the CIL presently consists of 17 volumes in approximately 70 parts, recording some 180,000 inscriptions. Thirteen supplementary volumes have plates and specialized indices. The first volume, in two sections, covered the oldest inscriptions, to the end of the Roman Republic; volumes II to XIV are divided geographically, according to the regions where the inscriptions were found and within these divisions also by inscription type. A two-volume "Index of Numbers," correlating inscription numbers with volume numbers, was published in 2003.

        Background

        In 2009 the Heads of the libraries of the American Academy in Rome, Rebecka Lindau, and École Française de Rome, Yannick Nexon, met to discuss the possibility of digitizing the volumes of the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum currently out of copyright. This had been a desire of both for a long time. Soon the Deutsches Archäologisches Institut and the Head of its library, Thomas Fröhlich, joined the project. Providing a server to host the volumes was more of a challenge. The DAI and Reinhard Foertsch at the University of Cologne came to the rescue with their object database Arachne, which is dynamically connected to international aggregators such as Claros or the multinational European project Carare, and freely available on the Web.
        The members of the project are:
        Rebecka Lindau (rebecka.lindau@aarome.org) and Paolo Imperatori (paolo.imperatori@aarome.org), the American Academy in Rome; Thomas Fröhlich (thomas.froehlich@dainst.de) and Paola Gulinelli (paola.gulinelli@dainst.de), Deutsches Archäologisches Institut; Elena Avellino (elena.avellino@efrome.it), l’École française de Rome; Reinhard Foertsch (foertsch@uni-koeln.de), Universität zu Köln (for Arachne).
        The project partners are grateful to Institutum Romanum Finlandiae, Svenska Institutet i Rom, and the British School at Rome for lending some volumes for scanning.

        The following volumes are online:

        TitleParts
        vol. I Inscriptiones Latinae antiquissimae ad C. Caesaris mortem.1863

        vol. I² Inscriptiones Latinae antiquissimae ad C. Caesaris mortem.pars I Fasti consulares ad a. u. c. DCCLXVI. Elogia clarorum virorum. Fasti anni Iuliani. Cura TH. MOMMSEN, W. HENZEN, CHR. HUELSEN. 1893
        pars II, fasc. I Inscriptiones Latinae antiquissimae. Cura E. LOMMATZSCH. 1918
        pars II, fasc. II Addenda. Nummi. Indices. Cura E. LOMMATZSCH, H. DESSAU.

        vol. II Inscriptiones Hispaniae Latinae. Edidit AEM. HÜBNER. 1869
        Supplementum. 1892

        vol. III Inscriptiones Asiae, provinciarum Europae Graecarum, Illyrici Latinae. Edidit TH. MOMMSEN. 1873pars I Inscriptiones Aegypti et Asiae. Inscriptiones provinciarum Europae Graecarum. Inscriptionum Illyrici partes I-V
        pars II Inscriptionum Illyrici partes VI. VII. Res gestae divi Augusti. Edictum Diocletiani de pretiis rerum. Privilegia militum veteranorumque. Instrumenta Dacica
        Supplementum. Inscriptionum Orientis et Illyrici Latinarum supplementum. Edid. TH. MOMMSEN, O. HIRSCHFELD, A. DOMASZEWSKI pars I (fasc. I-III. 1889 1893). 1902.
        Supplementum. Inscriptionum Orientis et Illyrici Latinarum supplementum. Edid. TH. MOMMSEN, O. HIRSCHFELD, A. DOMASZEWSKI pars II (fasc. IV-V). 1902 (impr. iter. 1967)

        vol. IV Inscriptiones parietariae Pompeianae Herculanenses Stabianae. Edid. C. ZANGEMEISTER, R. SCHOENE. 1871
        Supplementi pars I Tabulae ceratae Pompeiis repertae. Edidit C. ZANGEMEISTER. 1898
        Supplementi pars II Inscriptiones parietariae et vasorum fictilium. Edidit A. MAU. 1909

        vol. V Inscriptiones Galliae Cisalpinae Latinae. Edidit TH. MOMMSEN.pars I Inscriptiones regionis Italiae decimae. 1872 (impr. iter. 1959)
        pars II Inscriptiones regionum Italiae undecimae et nonae. 1877

        vol. VI Inscriptiones urbis Romae Latinae. Collegerunt G. HENZEN, I. B. DE ROSSI, E. BORMANN, CHR. HUELSEN, M. BANG.pars I Inscriptiones sacrae. Augustorum, magistratuum, sacerdotum. Latercula et tituli militum. Edid. E. BORMANN et G. HENZEN. 1876
        pars II Monumenta columbariorum. Tituli officialium et artificium. Tituli sepulcrales reliqui: A-Claudius. Edid. E. BORMANN, G. HENZEN, CHR. HUELSEN. 1882
        pars III Tituli sepulcrales: Claudius-Plotius. Edid. E. BORMANN, G. HENZEN, CHR. HUELSEN. 1886
        pars IV, fasc. I Tituli sepulcrales: Plotia-Zozon. Inscriptiones varii argumenti. Fragmenta. Edidit CHR. HUELSEN. 1894
        pars IV, fasc. II Additamenta. Edidit CHR. HUELSEN. 1902
        pars IV, fasc. III Additamentorum auctarium. Edidit M. BANG. 1933
        pars V Inscriptiones falsae. Edid. E. BORMANN, G. HENZEN, CHR. HUELSEN. 1885
        pars VI, fasc. I Index nominum. Edidit M. BANG. 1926

        vol. VII Inscriptiones Britanniae Latinae. Edidit AEM. HUEBNER. 1873

        vol. VIII Inscriptiones Africae Latinae. Collegit G. WILMANNS. Edidit TH. MOMMSEN. 1881pars I Inscriptiones Africae proconsularis et Numidiae
        pars II Inscriptiones Mauretaniarum
        Supplementi pars I Inscriptiones Africae proconsularis. Edid. R. CAGNAT, I. SCHMIDT. 1891
        Supplementi pars II Inscriptiones provinciae Numidiae. Edid. R. CAGNAT, I. SCHMIDT. Commentariis instruxerunt I. SCHMIDT, H. DESSAU 1894
        Supplementi pars III Inscriptiones Mauretaniae. Miliaria et instrumentum domesticum. Edid. I. SCHMIDT, R. CAGNAT, H. DESSAU. 1904
        Supplementi pars IV Inscriptiones Africae proconsularis. Edid. R. CAGNAT, H. DESSAU. 1916

        vol. IX Inscriptiones Calabriae, Apuliae, Samnii, Sabinorum, Piceni Latinae. Edidit TH. MOMMSEN. 1883

        vol. X Inscriptiones Bruttiorum, Lucaniae, Campaniae, Siciliae, Sardiniae Latinae. Edidit TH. MOMMSEN. 1883pars I
        pars II

        vol. XI Inscriptiones Aemiliae, Etruriae, Umbriae Latinae. Edidit E. BORMANN.pars I Inscriptiones Aemiliae et Etruriae. 1888
        pars II, fasc. 1 Inscriptiones Umbriae, viarum publicarum, instrumenti domestici. 1901
        pars II, fasc. 2 Addenda ad partes priores et indicum capita tria. 1926

        vol. XII Inscriptiones Galliae Narbonensis Latinae. Edidit O. HIRSCHFELD. 1888

        vol. XIII Inscriptiones trium Galliarum et Germaniarum Latinae. Edid. O. HIRSCHFELD et C. ZANGEMEISTER.pars I, fasc. 1 Inscriptiones Aquitaniae et Lugudunensis. Edidit O. HIRSCHFELD. 1899
        pars I, fasc. 2 Inscriptiones Belgicae. Edidit O. HIRSCHFELD. 1904
        pars II, fasc. 1 Inscriptiones Germaniae superioris. Edidit C. ZANGEMEISTER. 1905
        pars II, fasc. 2 Inscriptiones Germaniae inferioris. Miliaria Galliarum et Germaniarum. Edid. TH. MOMMSEN, O. HIRSCHFELD, A. DOMASZEWSKI. 1907
        pars III, fasc. 1 Instrumentum domesticum I. Edidit O. BOHN. 1901
        pars III, fasc. 2 Instrumentum domesticum II. Edidit O. BOHN. Insunt signacula medicorum oculariorum. Edidit AEM. ESPÉRANDIEU. 1906
        pars IV Addenda ad partes primam et secundam. Edid. O. HIRSCHFELD et H. FINKE. 1916
        pars VI Signacula publice laterculis impressa. Edidit E. STEIN. Accedunt signacula laterculis a privatis impressa. Edidit E. VOLKMANN. 1933

        vol. XIV Inscriptiones Latii veteris Latinae. Edidit H. DESSAU. 1887
        Supplementum Ostiense. Edidit L. WICKERT. 1930.
        Supplementi Ostiensis fasciculus II. Indices topographicos composuit L. WICKERT. 1933

        vol. XV Inscriptiones urbis Romae Latinae. Instrumentum domesticum. Edidit H. DRESSELpars I Edidit H. DRESSEL. 1891
        pars II, fasc. 1 Edidit H. DRESSEL. 1899

        vol. XVI Diplomata militaria. Post TH. MOMMSEN edidit H. NESSELHAUF. 1936

        Priscae Latinitatis monumenta epigraphica. Tabulae lithographae. Edidit FR. RITSCHL. 1862 (impr. iter. 1961 et 1968) ISBN 3-11-001417-3. Accedunt: Priscae Latinitatis epigraphicae supplementa quinque. Edidit FR. RITSCHL. 1862-1864

        Auctarium Exempla scripturae epigraphicae Latinae a Caesaris dictatoris morte ad aet. Iustiniani. Edidit AEM. HUEBNER. 1885

        The egyptologist Georg Steindorff: A heritage in letters and its scientific exploration

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        The egyptologist Georg Steindorff: A heritage in letters and its scientific exploration
        The self-reflexion of a discipline is always a reflection of the consciousness of the time dependence of scientific research too. The possibility of a substantiated description of historical science cultures stands and falls admittedly with suitable, sufficient explicit and complex source-situations. Archive documents are not of interest because of their anecdotal statement, the quality always depends much more on the possibility of a many-sided view, which allows a control of the studies.

        These aspects obtain outstanding importance, if biographies with a good situation of proofs bridge big breaks of history. Hardly one biography of an Egyptologist in the 19. – 20. Century is documented and suitable to reflect the field of Egyptology from the height of the German Empire, trough the 1. World War and the German Revolution, the Weimar Republic, the Nazi-era and the 2. World War to reorganisation of the post-war period under the sign of redemocratisation of the western societies and is thereby comprehensible in varying roles in a multitude of archives with different characters like the one of Georg Steindorff.
        Georg Steindorff is born in 1861 in the Duchy of Anhalt to a Jewish family of the middle class in Dessau. He evolves into a typical representative of the dynamic pioneers in the time of the Second Industrial Revolution in the German Empire and maintains friendly contact with the royal family of Saxony. For a membership in the First World War he is already too old. In the Weimar Republic he gains, thanks to his role in Egyptology as publisher of the most important professional journal, the Zeitschrift für Ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde (ZÄS), and thanks to his close connection with the doyen of German Egyptology, Adolf Erman, an inviolable position in the Saxon Academy of Sciences, the central management of the German Archeological Institute and the University of Leipzig, of which he is principal in 1923/24. Steindorff already converted to Protestantism during his studies in the 80ies of the 19. Century, but due to his Jewish origin he soon comes to the fore of the national-socialist race ideology. After the employment ban in 1934 and other following repressions, he emigrates to the USA in 1939.
        Steindorffs diaries and letters always make, besides scientific questions, the political processes in Germany and Europe a subject of discussion. Immediately after the end of the war the contact by letter to plenty of academic carriers of responsibility in Egyptology in Germany reinstates. The international recognized, now 84 year-old Scientist becomes an active commentator of the Nazi-dictatorship and the entanglement of individual exponents. At the same time he carefully observes from distance the development of his old domain and academy in the soviet-occupied zone and the just founded GDR until his death in summer of 1951.
        Steindorffs curriculum vitae is an impressive example for the way of a member of the emancipated Jewish middle class, who managed his way to the top of the institutions with his engagement, talent and enthusiasm and of whom is no getting around in Egyptology in time before and between the two World Wars. His active lecturing activities, also in front of notinternal audiences, today appear as almost modern. With the single-minded construction of also this very day’s biggest academic teaching-collection at a German university he provided importance to the science-location Leipzig, out of the German borders. The same applies for his directional role in conflicts of his generation about the primacy of the egyptological methodology and the theory-charged concepts of the 1920ies and 30ies, whose effects are disappeared from the awareness today, although they significantly characterized Egyptology in the post-war time.
        The importance of this personality is especially documented with his complex heritage of letters. The research and publication in ARACHNE was made possible by the donation of the private correspondence of Georg Steindorff by his grandson Thomas Hemer to the Leipzig University. Therefore, he owes the biggest debt of gratitude. The bundle of archival documents includes more than 6000 single sheets of the years 1884-1951. The research was made within the project "Wissenshintergründe und Forschungstransfer am Beispiel des Ägyptologen Georg Steindorff" from 2013 – 2015 with support from the German Research Foundation. The publication of the results will appear in 2016: Susanne Voss und Dietrich Raue (Hgg.), Wissenshintergründe und Forschungstransfer am Beispiel des Ägyptologen Georg Steindorff, Beihefte der Zeitschrift für Ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde 3, Berlin: De Gruyter 2016.
        They represent a first step of development, in which contributed, besides the publishers, Alexandra Cappel, Thomas Gertzen and Kerstin Seidel. To put the archive online to ARACHNE shall enable a broad circle of a scientifically interested audience to work out more research focuses.
        Susanne Voss – Dietrich Raue
        View the Steindorff letters

        The Brick Stamps of the Imperial Residences on the Palatine Hill in Rome.

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        The Brick Stamps of the Imperial Residences on the Palatine Hill in Rome.
        RM 121: Evelyne Bukowiecki – Ulrike Wulf-Rheidt, I bolli laterizi delle residenze imperiali sul Palatino a Roma, RM 121, 2015, 311–482.
        As part of the German Archaeological Institute’s “Palatin-Projekt”, a series of large-scale, systematic and architectural studies have been carried out in the southeast corner of the Palatine Hill, in collaboration with German and international universities. A comprehensive topographical survey of the four major monumental complexes in this area – the Domus Severiana, the Stadium, the Domus Augustana and the Domus Flavia – has allowed for an overarching and improved understanding of the development of the Imperial residences. The detailed archaeological analysis of the façade in opus testaceum made possible the identification of more than 400 epigraphic bricks stamps.
        This article’s primary objective is the presentation of these brick stamps found in situ. For the sake of comprehensiveness, we also consider all the brick stamps identified in previous studies and mentioned by the bibliography, which cannot be found in situ anymore. Altogether, the current collection consists of 940 stamps, of which 599 were found in situ and 341 out of context: 160 in the Domus Severiana, 305 in the Stadium, 207 in the Domus Augustana and 268 in the Domus Flavia. This catalog has made possible detailed insight into the topographical repartition of the brick stamps on the Palatine, to establish a much more nuanced – and moreover modified – chronology of the building activities, and to study the supply mechanisms of building materials in the Imperial sites. Therefore, the article represents an important instrument for further research – not only on the Palatine, but also for the whole of Imperial Rome.
        For each of the four monuments studied, the brick stamps mentioned by the bibliography will first be identified and then, considering all the stamps found in situ, their topographic repartition will be presented according to the five levels of circulation identified on the Palatine. For each monument, a subsection will subsequently be devoted to the interpretation of the construction phases (pre-Flavian, Flavian, Trajanic, Hadrianic, Antonine, Diocletian, Maxentian and Theodoric) according to predefined “chronological groups”.
        These “chronological groups” reflect an arbitrary choice that, on the one hand, takes into account our interpretive assumptions of the succession of construction phases, and, on the other, considers the important historical phases of brick production in Rome:
        • Group 1: 1st century AD until 93/94 AD
        • Group 2: end of Domitian’s reign to the beginning of Trajan’s reign (95–110 AD)
        • Group 3: end of Trajan’s reign to the beginning of Hadrian’s reign (111–122 AD)
        • Group 4: Hadrian’s reign after 123 AD (123–138 AD)
        • Group 5: Antonine Dynasty after Hadrian (138–192 AD)
        • Group 6: Severan Dynasty (193–235 AD)
        • Group 7: Diocletian to Theodoric
        ... To make the brick stamp digital catalog in Arachne more user-friendly, two methods of access are provided: The brick stamps have been organized first by “chronological groups”, each divided according to the four sections of the Imperial palaces. The brick stamps are then also organized according to their topographic distribution within the four complexes, with subdivisions of brick stamps found in situ, brick stamps out of context, all the brick stamps, for the respective levels, as well as those mentioned in the bibliography whose precise location is unknown. The locations of the brick stamps found in situ and of those from the literature, which can be clearly assigned to a room, are marked on the floor plans of the different levels of the complexes. They are marked in different colors, according to their corresponding “chronological group”.
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